Wednesday, January 17, 2018

I take to my keyboard once again to pen some thoughts on an issue
that hits close to home. Let me preface
this by telling you a few things about myself.
I grew up entrenched in religion.
That religion communicated to me that the role of a woman was to be
quiet and still and obedient. However, I
also grew up in a household which was led by a true partnership and with a father
who has always spoken empowerment over me.
Fast forward 20 years when God, despite my ardent protests, called me to
leadership. I now, at 27, am an ordained
female pastor who serves in many different leadership positions.

I can honestly say that I never would have chosen this path
for myself. In fact, I can look back on
my life and admit that for most of it I was running and hiding from this
calling. Yet, God dragged me into it
(despite my kicking and screaming along the way). I say
I wouldn’t have chosen this path and yet I know I was designed for it.

See, I have always had fire in my heart. This, more often than not, has resulted in a
hot head and a quick tongue and great attempts by many to put me out. The thing about fire is that while it is
incredibly powerful it is also quite dangerous, especially to dry brush and
hard hearts. Because of this effort by many
people in my life to extinguish my flames I became quite angry and arrogant and
more resolved to burn brighter and hotter.
I refused to give in; I refused to submit to anything; I refused to be
tamed.

And that’s when they won.

That’s when they won because that’s when I became so focused
on elevating and “proving” myself that I could no longer see the needs of other
people. What good am I as a leader if I
neglect those in my care?

This week some discussion has occurred in a space that I
participate in regarding women leading men in the church. Arguments were made, lines drawn, religious
muscles flexed, verses cited, and Theology toted. As I reflect this morning on all of these
things my heart cannot help but scream, “AREN’T WE MISSING THE POINT?!” We want to have this grand discussion on
women leading and men leading and tradition and blah blah blah all based in
this GIANT misconception that Christian leadership is about power over
others.

I mean, I get it, that’s the human way. Us humans, we like power, and in this world leadership
is often defined by the power it holds. But
have we so quickly forgotten that things with God tend to be a little
backwards? Crack open your Bible and you
will find that the leaders within its pages were thugs, prostitutes, murders, drunks,
and, yes, even women. Most all of whom
were plucked from the lowest of the low to serve God’s people. God doesn’t seem to care too much about
humanities designations of people or cultural constructs. With Him, it seems, we are truly all equal. Even
if you neglect the significance of these leaders you still have to face the
greatest leader of them all… Jesus.

Jesus, you remember Him, that one guy that supposedly is the
center of our faith. Yeah, well that guy seemed to think that great
leadership looked like bending down half naked in front of His followers and
washing manure covered toes. That guy demonstrated that kingship
meant a criminal’s death. And so, I
cannot help but believe that the highest of callings within the church is
actually the lowliest. I cannot help but
believe that those of us who are given the strength to lead are to use that
strength to lift others up above us.

Look, I am and ever will be a proponent of gender equality
both inside and outside of the church. I
will forever be a warrior woman. I believe
in empowering and strengthening other women.
I still sometimes (all the time) get SUPER frustrated with those men who
for some reason see the need to puff their chests and prove their supremacy. And, let’s be honest, I often find myself
calling those men out on their BS (as those of you who know me can
attest). However, I am continuing to
learn that my greatest strength as a leader is to uplift and empower those
around me. It is of far greater value to
raise others up than it is to become embittered by those who seek to tear down.

I write all of this to urge each one of you, may we never
get so distracted by the principles that we neglect our purpose. May our
attention never be so stolen away by the rules that we neglect relationship. May Law never win and may Grace always
prevail and may Jesus, not the world, be our only standard.

Monday, April 3, 2017

She wasn't a dancer but she liked to let the music move her. She would escape to a field on the outside of town and listen to the music all around her. The wind blowing through the grass made a deep whooshing, the pitter patter of animal's feet beat like tiny drums against the ground, and the shrill soprano of birds whistling pierced the air. It was as if He were orchestrating a symphony just for her.

She would spin and twirl, the wind tossing her baggy clothes to and fro. She was a beautifully free ball of chaos exploding from within herself. All of her went in different directions as she moved with reckless abandon, caught up in the moment, and doted on by the Creator of the very ground upon which she danced.

She said nothing and yet she worshiped. She offered nothing and yet it was enough, She was alone and yet she was held close. She moved with clumsy grace and I am madly in love with her.

Monday, October 31, 2016

As I am sure has been apparent to those of you who follow me
on a regular basis I have been on a new journey lately towards self-love. I have found that though I can always accept
quite readily that God loves me and I can sometimes accept that other people
love me, I have an incredibly difficult time loving myself. Some of this struggle comes from growing up
within religion where self-love was labeled selfishness as the continual
reminder to “die to self” repeatedly echoed through the empty places in my
soul.

I have lived my life mostly unaware what trouble hating
myself has caused me. As I began my
self-hate recovery journey a little over a year ago I saw chains break inside
me that I had no idea where held captive.
Not long ago my cousin Catherine challenged me to something she called “She
Speaks Truth to Herself.” The challenge
was to write a letter to myself speaking truth to my own heart. It was incredibly difficult and incredibly
healing. [Click here to read my blog of that challenge]. So, when she asked me
if I wanted to preview her poetry chapbook with the same title and write a
review of it I was super excited to say yes!

She Speaks Truth to Herself by Catherine Valentine is a
fantastic little chapbook packed full of truth and healing words. I’m kind of a sucker for poetry anyway
(probably because I really suck at writing it) so it wasn’t incredibly hard for
this collection to win me over. In this
book Catherine is fearlessly authentic and beautiful exposed. My favorite piece in the book is called “Broken.” Here is my favorite stanza:

This is
God’s church, these are His people--the wounded,
the broken, hypocrite and liar.In good
company in the church of the broken.

I would
definitely recommend this chapbook to anyone who is interested in poetry,
truth, or authentic people. I hope it
will encourage you to start your own self-love journey and in turn free places
in you that you didn’t know were captive.
It surely has helped do that for me.

For more
writing by Catherine check out her website here: www.catherinevalentine.wix.com/cvalentinewriter

Monday, October 17, 2016

Life itself can hang on the ins and outs of just one
breath. In fact, with very little
research one will find that life’s origin lies in one breath. One holy breath. One exhale from God and one inhale from man
and life exploded into being. One
exhale, one inhale, it’s all so simple.

Today as I sat in the break area at work hanging desperately
to the last minutes of escape before going back to invoices and numbers and expectations,
I took an extra moment to breathe. I
took just one big deep breath in and let it sink its way down into the depths
of me, and as I exhaled I felt my shoulders slump and relax for a moment… a
fleeting but precious moment.

Have you ever stopped to think about what breathing really
is? I mean, have you ever REALLY thought
about it? Breathing is about
receiving. Breathing is receiving life
from outside of yourself. It’s about
taking in nutrients and energy and expelling all that is not those things. One exhale from God and one inhale from man.

It’s funny to me how I so often think that I am in
control. How often a cling to my
independence thinking that makes me strong.
AND YET I cannot even take a breath without being dependent on things
outside of myself to supply me with life-- on trees and plants and molecules of
oxygen that I can’t even see with my own eyes.

I can’t help but liken this physical life to the less
tangible reality of spiritual life.
Interestingly enough in the Hebrew language the word for “breath” and
the word for “spirit” are actually the same word. It’s the word “Ruach” and it carries with it
the undertone of both life and power. When
the Hebrews spoke of “spirit” it was linked to identity. Who you were was defined by your spirit or your
breath of life. This linking of breath
and spirit and life and identity is peppered ALL through the Bible (weird, it’s
like it’s important or something).

Now, you might be saying, “Ok, Jess, we get it you’re a huge
Bible nerd, but what does that have to do with us now?” Well, my friends, what if I told you that you
have been breathed into with the holy breath of Jesus himself? What if you possess in you the very life
force of a Savior too powerful to be held by the grave? What if, your identity is linked to Jesus
Himself?

Well, you have. You do.
It is.

Moreover if the Spirit of the one who raised Jesus from the
dead lives in you, the one who raised Christ from the dead will also make your
mortal bodies alive through his Spirit who lives in you.

Romans 8:11 (NET)

You know the problem with the Church today? We only preach half of the gospel. We want to talk about forgiveness all day
long. Which is great, don’t get me
wrong, we’d be hopeless beings were it not for the mercy of forgiveness, but
that’s only half of the story. See because not only was our sin defeated with
Christ’s last breath on that cross, but HIS spiritual life was provided to us
as He kicked down death’s door and busted out of the tomb. The gospel is incomplete without the glorious
grace of Christ’s life IN us. One exhale
by God and one inhale by man.

Many will present lists and guidelines and 10 step programs
to live a good Christian life neglecting the fact that we are wholly dependent
of the Holy breath of God to accomplish any of those things. Or have we forgotten that even in our
breathing we are dependent beings? We
are receivers; God is the giver; may we never confuse the two.

One exhale from God. One
inhale from man. That’s the gospel.

But God demonstrates his own love for us, in that while we
were still sinners, Christ died for us. Much more then, because we have now been
declared righteous by his blood, we will be saved through him from God’s wrath.
For if while we were enemies we were
reconciled to God through the death of his Son, how much more, since we have
been reconciled, will we be saved by his life? Not only this, but we also rejoice in God
through our Lord Jesus Christ, through whom we have now received this
reconciliation.

Tuesday, June 14, 2016

My wonderful and talented cousin, Catherine, wrote a beautiful poem called She Speaks Truth to Herself which will be included in her next book of the same title. She recently blogged a letter that she had written to herself in her own voice that was inspired by this piece and challenged me to do the same. When I read her letter I have to be honest… it totally wrecked me. What a beautiful thing to speak truth over oneself.

I have written a few pieces that act sort of like letters to me from God (one of which will be included in my new book coming out next month) and let me tell you those are emotionally wrecking enough! But to think of speaking over myself in my own voice was slightly terrifying and therefore I knew immediately that it needed to be done.

So, last night I “went to bed early” which really means I went and hid in my room and wrote for 2 hours and this is what I ended up with. I cannot express how difficult and healing and emotional and empowering this process was. I challenge everyone to try it; you might be surprised what you learn about yourself in the process.

Jess,

Oh Jess, I have been so hard on you. So many times I have dismissed your great triumphs while other times I have neglected to embrace your failures. I know that this has left you with a war inside that keeps you from being able to fully love yourself. Please forgive me for this. You are so much stronger than you know. You have walked through so much darkness many times without a flashlight. You have faced monsters, and you have leaped over mountains.

You are a warrior. You are brave. You are loved so much by so many; never let the days of loneliness, when it feels as if no one understands you, never let those moments drowned out the truth that you are incredibly loved and important. Depression and anxiety do not define you. Addiction is not your master. You are a free, vibrant, passionate daughter of your Father God and He delights in teaching you your identity. You have struggled to be accepted your entire life and even now, when others seem to only want you for what you can do for them, DO NOT FORGET that you are held tight by heavenly arms. He is closer than the skin on your bones.

I am proud of you. Though your humanity is hardwired for struggle you are an overcomer. Even when you hide behind your tough smirk and edgy style you are a dainty porcelain doll in the hands of The King and He handles you with care and affection. Being soft is not weakness.

You are enough. Even when you have empty hands. You are enough. Even when you are exhausted. You are enough. Even when you can't push down those emotions you hate so much. You are enough. And you are worthy of love and affection. Don't you ever stop believing that. Don't you ever give up hope. Don't you ever stop fighting to create those spaces of grace you are desperate for.

You have purpose and design but you are not shackled to your efforts. Remember to rest. Though you are incredibly significant, the world is more than capable of getting along without you, so stop believing things will fall apart if you stop holding them together. Your arms aren't big enough for that, but your God's are. Be still. You deserve times of rest. Self-care is not selfish.

Never stop believing in the church, even if it has failed you more times than you can count. Never stop believing in good men, even if you have been hurt by bad ones. Never stop loving strong women, even if you have been bullied by them. They are all worth it just as you are.

You are beautiful. Your differentness is attractive and endearing. Your goofiness is adorable. Don't even change just to please someone. I love you; today, tomorrow, and the next day. Even when I forget to say it, even when I don't want to say it, even when it hurts to say it, I love you. Keep your head up, darling. Clear eyes and full hearts can't lose.

Monday, May 16, 2016

What is it with us humans and our general lack of ability to vulnerable and authentic? I mean really, what’s with that? Why are we so scared to just be honest about our struggles? We all know they exist. It is blatantly obvious that each and every one of us struggle, and yet we are terrified to admit our own battles.

Christians? Oh yeah, we’re the worst about it. Our churches have become spaces of structure and regulation that leave little room for messy people. Somewhere along the way religion became tangled in the expectation of doing everything perfectly and sabotaged the ability for people to be real with one another. And don’t go thinking it’s just the “religious types” either because it’s not. Us grace gospel types can fall into this same trap, talking about grace like it’s just a Theological concept instead of what (for some of us, most of the time) is the only thing that gets us out of bed in the morning.

I think we're just afraid of our own ugliness. So then it's easier for us to be enraged about the "big" issues in our world, to throw a fit over unisex bathrooms, to spew hatred over people's choices at the polls, and to mock legalistic pastors. It is much easier for us to face the monsters we see in the world than it is to face the ones under our bed.

And in neglecting to face the monsters under our beds, we effectively sabotage the great story of redemption. For it is only in the most desperate and most unmanageable of moments that we can truly see the ineffable glory of grace and its ability to conquer even the most ruthless of foes.

Maybe that's what Jesus meant when he said, "those who have been forgiven much love much." Maybe his words were not meant as qualifiers of the greatness of one's love but rather exposers of the depth of one's need.

Only when we are brave enough to come out from under the covers and meet the monsters we imagine to be formidable face to face are we able to see them whimpering and wailing under the rescuing fist of God's grace. It is inevitable that in these moments we will be brought to our knees once again in awe and wonder of a God who transcends our situation and yet is intimately aware of our pain.

We want to tame grace, to lasso it, and tie it down to the pew next to us. It bucks and jumps and lays to waste the structured box of a building we’ve placed it in like a bull in a china shop. Grace is not safe. It saves. There’s a big difference between the two. It will hazardously force you to have to face the monsters under your bed but it will also rescue you from them. I wish we would allow ourselves to be brave enough to look under our beds. Then maybe, just maybe, in being honest about the monsters under our beds we might find that the ones in the world aren’t as big as they seemed.

Tuesday, May 10, 2016

All of these directives seem good and honorable, and they are taught as such. Many a pastor and Christian teacher has used them as mission statements and explanations of the “good Christian life.” We are taught that pursuing God is something we should always be doing.

Chase after Him. Look for Him. Be in pursuit of God. What you do when you find Him no one has quite figured out yet, but what everyone knows for sure is that we should be pursuing Him. Unfortunately, what that sounds like is that He's hiding away somewhere, tucked just out of sight, and waiting for the magical day when someone's worthy pursuit ends at the finish line of Him. If you listen to this message long enough you will eventually come to the conclusion that you will never get to the finish line (at least not in this life), but you must, by no means, ever never stop running. Keep doing. Keep working. Keep trying your hardest, putting forth your best efforts, and stretching your farthest towards godliness.

For all of humanity's existence we've been trying to claw our way up to God. We've built towers and constructed temples all under the banner of "pursuing God." The temptation of Adam was "God likeness." He pursued God to the point of his own death, sacrificing abundant life to gain it himself. Sounds like pursuit of God didn't work out so well for him?

What if all this time we've been pursuing God and missing the point all along? What if the Christian life is not about our pursuit of God but rather God's relentless pursuit of us?

Jesus was presented with the same temptation as Adam, but instead of pursuing God likeness he relinquished it to the point of His own death, sacrificing His life so that we could have it abundantly.

Maybe our problem is that we see Jesus as an example for us. We see him as a standard we should in some way model or live up to, and yet that was never his purpose on this earth. Jesus did not come to show us what we should try to be like. He came to show us EXACTLY what God is like. He came to set the record straight. He came to silence the very first lie that ever slipped off the tongue of the serpent, that God is distant and withholding, and show us exactly how excessive and gracious God really is. Jesus came to make an unfathomable God tangible. He came as a flesh and blood representation of God's stubborn delight in a people hell-bent on independence. What an audacious reality, that the God of the universe we try desperately to work our way towards, instead slips into the fragile skin of our humanity as if to say, "No, children, let me come to you."

Oh how generous and glorious a God! How inexpressibly thankful I am that He pursues me. Because, if I’m being honest, I’m much more likely to be found cowering in my nakedness behind some fig leaves than running after Him. Still, He comes, walking through the cool of the garden, to pull me close and silence my shame for He has never been scared away by sin. If I’m being honest, I’m much more likely to be a petulant and stubborn child of Israel who rather be oppressed once again under the shackles of Egypt than to trust God’s faithfulness to fight for me. And still He comes, parting the sea of my struggle and drowning my bondage in perfect love. If I’m honest, I’m much more likely to be an idol worshiping judge, a depressed king, or a doubting disciple than I am to be trusted champion of The Kingdom. And still He comes, calling me to care for His people.

So, I've come to the decision to stop pursing God and instead rest every day in the awareness of His pursuit of me. It’s time we all stopped running. It’s time we gave up on pursuing a God who is already closer even than the skin on our bones. It’s time we chose to stop pursuing God and rest in THE pursuing God.

May you come to know the reality of an intimate God that has pursued and embraced you.

Who I Am

Writer. Radical. Former addict sabotaged by extravagant, scandalous, excessive grace. I believe in a God who does big things in small people; the God of royal shepherds, fearful warriors, and rebel pastors.